Tips for Photographing Christmas Ornaments & Lights

WDWFigment

DIS Veteran
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Mar 8, 2007
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I have a question for you guys about Christmas light bokeh. I've been doing some test shots with some ornaments and other stuff (don't laugh), and thus far have not had much luck. I assume the best bet for getting pleasing circular bokeh is using a higher focal length (I've tried 50mm @ f/1.8 and 200mm @ f/5.6), wide open aperture, and placing the lights as far from the ornament as possible.

I want the bokeh to look like this (see below), or as close to that as possible, except with ornaments, or whatever, in the foreground:


Any advice, article links, or suggestions would be appreciated. I'm really hoping the suggestion is not that I need to get a 105mm f/2.8 macro lens or something like that. If that is the suggestion, any ideas for extremely cheap (old manual focus lenses) options?
 
Tom, why stop at circular bokeh? I can't find the thread from last Christmas where Jeff showed us how to make Mickey head bokeh but it is along the same idea as this: DIY Bokeh designs or another DIY Bokeh Template. You could just make a circular template and shoot at whatever aperture that you wanted and they would be round. I plan on doing some designs when it gets closer.
 
Tom, why stop at circular bokeh? I can't find the thread from last Christmas where Jeff showed us how to make Mickey head bokeh but it is along the same idea as this: DIY Bokeh designs or another DIY Bokeh Template. You could just make a circular template and shoot at whatever aperture that you wanted and they would be round. I plan on doing some designs when it gets closer.

I've done that as well (it's gone from my Flickr account as it only displays my 200 most recent images--otherwise I'd post it here). The shot I have in my head is different, though.

In any case, I figured it out myself. I would still love to hear suggestions to fine tune things, but I think I have it figured out! Thanks!
 

The 35mm f1/4 AI-S renders very pleasing round out of focus elements like that. There are a couple bargain ones on KEH for about $450- hardly a bargain in my opinion- the lens was a lot cheaper a year or so ago.

Here are some examples though- http://www.nikoncafe.com/vforums/showthread.php?t=247587

Thanks for the link--some really cool shots there. I've actually never checked out Nikon Cafe. I am not good enough, nor do I care enough, to buy a lens for something like that (quality of the out of focus elements). I think that makes Sarah and my wallet happy, otherwise I might really push for a 17-55 f/2.8 and 70-200 f/2.8 to replace my 18-200.

When I said 'extremely cheap' old lenses, I was hoping for something in the $25-50 range. I don't even know if there are decent lenses in that price range; maybe I'm delusional!
 
When I said 'extremely cheap' old lenses, I was hoping for something in the $25-50 range. I don't even know if there are decent lenses in that price range; maybe I'm delusional!

These use to be all over Ebay for half that price or less if you were patient- no more. Nikon made about 125,000 of them though- so they are around. Never know what you might find on CL or at a garage sale.
 
I know these are nowhere near as clear on the bokeh as the example you posted, but here's a couple I got last year.

694464241_ES4Mm-M.jpg


If I remember correctly, the dog (who wouldn't sit up in front of the tree, so I had to lay on the floor to get any lights in the background :rotfl:) was about 2' in front of the tree, and I was about another 1' in front of her. I shot it with my Canon 40D, 50mm 1.8 lens, exif: f1.8, 1/8, ISO 800

694463990_fGbbK-M.jpg


This one shot with the same camera and lens exif: f1.8, 1/25, ISO 400

This one was much closer, the ornament was hanging right on the tree and I was about 1' from it. It looks like the flash was used, exif says it wasn't. IIRC I had DH hold a lamp without the shade close(~ 2') to give me additional light. And this ornament was on a tree with white lights so not very colorful bokeh.
 
These use to be all over Ebay for half that price or less if you were patient- no more. Nikon made about 125,000 of them though- so they are around. Never know what you might find on CL or at a garage sale.

I love garage sales and flea markets, so I really should learn more about older glass. As of right now, the only older glass I know anything about is antique pottery and glassware (thanks for the useless knowledge, mom and dad).
 
Hey all - thanks for the link to my site (aribrownest.com) above. In any case, the "right" way to make smooth round bokeh is to use a lens with a circular aperture opening (the aperture is composed of blades - making it circular means using a lens with many blades, possibly smoothed out to form a circle instead of a hexagon, etc.) Like you noted above, this is pretty expensive. I know the Canon 50mm 1.2 L is good for this, but it's also over $1000. An easy way to get this effect is to use the tutorial I posed above, but instead of making a heart or star (or Mickey) shape, just use a round hole punch. Should be pretty simple and you can do it with a $100 lens, as long as it has a wide enough aperture like the Canon 50mm 1.8. I think something in the range of 50mm 2.8 is about the smallest aperture/focal length combo that you're going to be able to pull something like this off with.
 
thanks for all the tips. this thread has been very helpful. and just in time for the holidays. :)
 


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